
Asus ExpertBook P1 is the only laptop I probably won't manage to break
Table of Contents
Table of Contents Is it performant? What makes the ExpertBook P1 stand out? Practicality, above anything
Over the years, I have curated a rather non-envious track record with handling electronics around me. From shattering the screen on iPhones, breaking the hinge of a foldable phone, a torn laptop lid, flattening the edges of MacBooks, and forgetting items in transit, the history of my misadventures is pretty diverse. And expensive.
But nothing hurts more than the damage incurred to a laptop, which you can't just hide behind a skin or case. I'd like to believe there are a few others like me, seeking a machine that can handle rough usage, or just happens to be sturdier than the rest. Asus certainly sees an opportunity in that bracket.
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The company recently introduced a trio of laptops in the ExpertBook P series. To my surprise, the company focused less on the usual performance-centric presentations, and more on the practical side of things, such as durability.
Is it performant?
A few days after the launch, I got my hands on the ExpertBook P1. I was in for a pleasant surprise. It's a fairly competent laptop, but more than that, it can brush off mechanical stress with ease. And on top of that, it fortifies a few areas that most brands barely pay any special attention to.
The configuration I tested came equipped with an Intel Core i7 (13620H) processor, ticking alongside 32GB of RAM and 512GB of M.2 NVMe PCIe 4.0 SSD. Thanks to extra slots, the RAM and storage are upgradable up to 64GB and 2TB, respectively. Over at the front is a 14-inch full-HD panel.
Now, this is neither the latest Intel chip nor the fanciest display out there. It is sharp and offers wide viewing angles without any noticeable color crushing. I wish it were a glass-based panel, but I would take Asus' anti-glare approach any given day.
The 10-core silicon is fairly powerful, though not the latest that Intel has to offer. When pitted against the 14-core Intel Core Ultra 5, it barely manages to achieve a higher single-core performance, but delivers a 30% lower multi-core performance.
The aging Intel processor again serves a higher single-core tally at Cinebench 2024 compared to Qualcomm's top-end Snapdragon X Elite, but underwhelms with its multi-core chops, yet again.
On the graphics front, the integrated Intel UHD graphics unit is roughly 18-20% behind the Arc graphics shipped with the second-gen Arrow Lake Ultra Series 2 processors. But numbers aside, this is still a pretty capable combination.
If you aren't diving into any demanding creative software suite, the configuration will get past most productivity software with ease. My workload involved Chrome (across two screens and three windows), Slack, Trello, Teams, and a handful of web instances for tools like Asana and consistent wireless music playback.
Running the laptop in Balanced profile, I easily got a full day of usage without any stutters or UI crashes. The battery, on the other hand, is promised to last three years without its electrochemical health falling below the 80% mark. It usually lasted me about 9-10 hours of continuous usage, but you can definitely extend it with a slightly modest brightness and performance tuning.
What I like the most is the charging flexibility. Natively, the triple-cell 50Whr battery supports 65W fast charging, but it allows the full spectrum of 5V-24V power input. I was able to charge the laptop with a power bank and gave it some last-mile juice. I hope more brands hop on to this trend this year!
What makes the ExpertBook P1 stand out?
The Asus laptop is not out there to turn eyeballs with aesthetics. It's clean and industrial, with a familiar Asus design. What sets it apart is the sturdy engineering, despite the laptop weighing just around three pounds.
This is a US MIL-STD 810H military-grade kit, covering nearly a dozen categories of tests. In addition to the usual temperature and altitude tests, the fortified build allows it to handle strong vibrations (500Hz) for a sustained period, mechanical shocks, and ingress protection against dust.
Asus says the base can survive a drop from a height of over a meter on a concrete floor. The build is plastic, but the chassis has been reinforced using metallic parts. It's hard to discern that the ExpertBook P1 offers all that, but after using it as my daily workhorse, I am confident that it can brush off a few accidents.
On the more practical side of things, both sides of the laptop can endure a smushing force worth around 110 pounds. This comes in handy for situations such as rough luggage handling, like the infamous airline baggage transport, packed under-carrriage in buses, or cramped slots in trains.
The lid itself can sustain a load of up to 55 pounds without causing any damage to the screen. For business professionals on the move or students in college, such structural hardiness is nothing short of a reassuring boon.
I tried to simulate the load test with some of my gym equipment, and the laptop came out unscathed. The base is certainly more sturdy, while the display lid is quite flexible. Asus says the laptop is tested to survive over 50,000 chassis twisting tests.
Laptop lids and the linked hinge mechanism are often a weak link. I have broken two in the span of five years, so I know the hurt and learned the pricey lesson. On the ExpertBook P1, Asus has used 1.2mm stainless steel hinge inserts and thicker screws, which are touted to survive 66% higher pulling force than an average laptop.
The hinge mechanism is indeed pretty durable. The flexing is visible, but there is no worrisome creaking to be heard. This is me holding the laptop at the hinge point, while exerting base pressure on the lid part:
The components are also locked tightly in place, and even when the laptop is dropped, there are no chinks or chimes to be heard, save for a flat thud.
Practicality, above anything
As laptops started to get smaller and slimmer, the industry adopted a trend of culling the ports. Asus has dodged that trend on the Expertbook P1. There are a couple of USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C ports and an equal number of USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-A ports on the laptop.
You also get an HDMI 1.4 and an RJ45 Gigabit Ethernet port, alongside a 3.5mm combo jack and a Kensington Nano lock. While the port diversity is a welcome move, Asus didn't cram them on one side. Instead, they are spaced out across the left and right edges.
I have often struggled with laptops that position the ports on one side. The MacBook Air is the best example. Anything thicker than an average USB-C cable blocks access to the other port. The only option left is to invest in a pricey port hub.
Interestingly, the Asus ExpertBook P1's I/O ports are also special. They have been certified to last 5,000 insert-eject cycles, but more importantly, they offer a pretty secure lock-in for the cables and accessories.
When I first saw the ExpertBook P5 dangling by a USB cable, I was surprised. Then I tested my P1 variant at home, and it didn't disappoint. Have a look:
The resilient character also extends to the keyboard, which can handle liquid spills. Personally, that's a huge sigh of relief. My cat recently orchestrated a soda spill on a laptop, and it ended up frying the circuits on the motherboard. I could never get it repaired.
The ExpertBook P1 integrates a FIDO-compliant fingerprint sensor within the trackpad area. It's a tad small, but it gets the job done. Asus also offers a whole bunch of security protection at both software and hardware levels. Among them is intrusion detection against unauthorized devices, and a discrete Trusted Platform Module (TPM) chip built within.
For BIOS attacks, downgrades are prevented to block exploits, and there's also an automatic recovery system in place if the BIOS is corrupted. For added privacy, there's a physical webcam shutter at the top.
Overall, with the ExpertBook P1, Asus has created a rather compelling laptop that is geared at professionals as well as students alike. It undercuts the MacBook premium, while also offering a handful of practical perks that are hard to find in the laptop market.

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CNET
an hour ago
- CNET
HP EliteBook Ultra G1i Review: A MacBook Air Alternative for C-Suite Execs
8.5 / 10 SCORE HP EliteBook Ultra G1i $1,899 at HP Pros Excellent 2.8K OLED display Beautiful design that's also compact and lightweight Competitive application and AI performance from Intel Lunar Lake CPU Cons Very expensive when not on sale Battery life is good but not great HP EliteBook Ultra G1i 8.5/10 CNET Score $1,899 at HP The EliteBook Ultra G1i may be a new model with a new name, but it comes with a familiar design. With its thin and light, well-built chassis, the EliteBook Ultra G1i is the clear successor to the HP Dragonfly G4, which I really liked as a premium business laptop. The display aspect ratio has changed from a boxy 3:2 ratio to the more common 16:10 layout, and the color of the laptop went from a matte black to a deep blue, but otherwise, the EliteBook Ultra G1i is basically a rebranded Dragonfly G4. It lives up to its Ultra billing -- from its design to its features and performance -- and is a great pick for traveling executives or anyone who appreciates a small, lightweight premium laptop for work. Just be sure to wait for it to go on sale if your company doesn't qualify for a volume-pricing discount. HP EliteBook Ultra G1i Price as reviewed $1,899 Display size/resolution 14-inch 2,880x1,800 120Hz OLED display CPU Intel Core Ultra 7 268V Memory 32GB LPDDR5-8533 Graphics Intel Arc 140V Storage 512GB SSD Ports 3 x Thunderbolt 4, USB 3.2 Gen 2, combo audio Networking Wi-Fi 7 and Bluetooth 5.4 Operating system Windows 11 Pro 24H2 Weight 2.6 lbs (1.18 kg) If you're trying to make sense of HP's new laptop nomenclature, then you first need to know that the OmniBook brand is the new home for the company's consumer models, with EliteBooks making up the commercial side of things. After that fork in the road, you'll next encounter a variety of models within each line, from entry-level units up to the flagship systems tagged with the Ultra suffix, such as the EliteBook Ultra G1i here. As the "i" indicates, the EliteBook Ultra G1i is an Intel-based laptop. It features Core Ultra Series 2 processors from Intel's Lunar Lake series that power the 14-inch clamshell with a 2.8K OLED display with a variable refresh rate of up to 120Hz and touch support. HP rotates discounts through all of its laptop lines, and the savings can be sizable for the EliteBook Ultra G1i. The entry-level EliteBook Ultra G1 has a Core Ultra 5 226V, 16GB of RAM, Intel Arc graphics, a 512GB SSD and a 2.8K OLED display. The full price for this model is $2,419, but I've seen it on sale for as low as $1,599. Our test system features a Core Ultra 7 268V and 32GB of RAM. While it lists for $2,909, you can often find it on sale for as low as $1,899. As a business laptop, the EliteBook Ultra G1i comes backed with a one-year warranty that includes a year of HP's Wolf Security suite. With that, you get hardware-enforced threat detection, malware isolation, BIOS and browser protection and the ability to remotely lock and wipe the system if it's lost or stolen. You can extend the warranty to three years and also include on-site service; the standard one-year plan includes depot service. A similar EliteBook Ultra G1i to our test system costs £1,752 in the UK and AU$3,870 in Australia. HP EliteBook Ultra G1i performance The EliteBook Ultra G1i's Core Ultra 7 268V processor is nearly identical to the more popular Lunar Lake offering in the Core Ultra 258V. You'll find the 258V chip offered widely, and I've tested a number of laptops with it, including the Acer Swift 14 AI, Asus Zenbook S 14 and Lenovo Yoga Slim 9i 14 Gen 10. The only difference between the two is that the 268V has slightly higher max CPU and GPU frequencies, along with a couple more GPU TOPS. Both processors have eight physical cores (four performance and four low-power efficient cores) and don't feature Intel's Hyper-Threading technology that allows a physical core to act as two virtual cores. Matt Elliott/CNET The EliteBook Ultra G1i's results on our lab tests were nearly identical to those of the aforementioned trio of laptops with the Core Ultra 258V -- strong single-core performance and less impressive multicore performance because of the lack of Hyper-Threading. Graphics performance from the Intel Arc 140V GPU is strong among integrated GPUs, but not to the point of forgetting that the EliteBook Ultra G1i is built for business and not gaming or demanding graphics work. On Procyon's AI Computer Vision benchmark that measures integer math proficiency for AI workloads, the EliteBook Ultra G1i's performance was on par with other laptops that feature modern AI processors. Battery life was good but not great. On our YouTube streaming battery drain test, the EliteBook Ultra G1i ran for 13 hours and 39 minutes, which is long enough to get through nearly any workday but still hours and hours less than laptops with an ARM-based Qualcomm Snapdragon X series CPU, some of which can run for more than 20 hours on a single charge. Ultra nice design The EliteBook Ultra G1i shares the same thin, rigid frame and elegant matte finish as the Dragonfly G4, but now comes in a dark navy blue -- a look I prefer over the Dragonfly's jet black. The EliteBook Ultra definitely has a premium look and feel. The all-metal chassis feels MacBook Air-like in being exceptionally thin and light without feeling flimsy. The build quality is excellent, with solid rigidity and the matte finish is pleasing to both the eye and touch. Matt Elliott/CNET At 2.6 pounds, the EliteBook Ultra G1i is just a hair heavier than the 2.5-pound Dragonfly G4, which is not surprising since the 14-inch, 16:10 display is slightly larger than the Dragonfly G4's 13.5-inch, 3:2 display. For its size, the EliteBook Ultra G1i is very light. Most 14-inch laptops weigh closer to 3 pounds, and it's lighter than the 13.6-inch MacBook Air, which weighs 2.7 pounds. If you're looking for an even lighter 14-inch laptop, check out the Asus Zenbook A14, which weighs only 2.16 pounds. And among business laptops, Lenovo's flagship ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 12 weighs only 2.4 pounds. The keyboard is more MacBook than ThinkPad, which is to say the keys offer shallow travel and snappy feedback. If you prefer a deeper keypress with a more plush feel, then a ThinkPad is probably the way to go. But if you've used a MacBook and liked the typing experience and want a Windows laptop for work, then the transition to the EliteBook Ultra G1i will be pretty seamless. The touchpad, too, is MacBook-like. It's huge -- even larger than the touchpad on the Dragonfly G4 -- and offers a lively and customizable haptic response. Matt Elliott/CNET The EliteBook Ultra G1i's audio output is surprisingly good. The quad speakers produce a clear and defined sound field with enough power to fill a small room. I could hear separation between the highs and mids, along with some bass response. At full volume, there was some degradation in the clarity, but only a bit. The sound would be impressive for any entertainment laptop -- and even more so given the EliteBook Ultra's business focus. The display is outstanding. For starters, it's an OLED panel, so you get vibrant colors and excellent contrast with deep black levels. Next, its 2.8K resolution offers the perfect balance between pixel count and battery life for a 14-inch display. Images and text look crisp to the point that a 4K resolution isn't needed for this size panel and would only shorten battery life. (The more pixels a battery must power, the quicker it gets drained.) Also offering a great balance between display performance and battery life is the variable refresh rate that lets the display run at 120Hz for smooth movement but at a lower rate when it's not needed to extend battery life. HP scrapped the boxy 3:2 aspect ratio of the Dragonfly G4 for a standard 16:10 panel that's found on most modern laptops. There's a good reason it's so popular: It offers the best balance between an old-school 16:9 widescreen and the boxy 3:2 ratio that never really caught on. At 14 inches, a 16:10 provides enough room for most people to work comfortably without needing to connect to an external display. And combined with the EliteBook Ultra G1i's thin bezels and thin design, you get this roomy-enough display in a lightweight, very portable package. Matt Elliott/CNET It's also a touchscreen, which is a nice option since most people have grown accustomed to tapping on screens. And it has edge-to-edge glass for a beautiful, seamless look befitting of its premium price. I tested its color performance and brightness with a Spyder X Elite colorimeter and the display performed well. It covered 100% of the sRGB and P3 spaces and 94% of AdobeRGB while also hitting a peak brightness of 386 nits. That brightness figure might not wow you on its own, but an OLED display doesn't need to get as bright as an LCD panel because of its excellent contrast and effectively zero-nit blacks. Above the display is a crisp, 9-megapixel webcam with an IR sensor for use with Windows Hello. HP's Poly Camera Pro app is well designed and offers AI-assisted options for automatic framing and blurring your background, among other effects. Poly Camera Pro should let you connect an external webcam and use it simultaneously with the laptop's internal camera, but I was unable to get a two-camera shoot going as I could with the Dragonfly G4, which was the first laptop I've tested with dual-webcam support. It's a niche feature -- good for those who need to give online tutorials or create other content where a second camera could be useful -- but I've asked HP for guidance on how to use two cameras at the same time on the EliteBook Ultra G1i. I'll update this review with what I find out. Matt Elliott/CNET The port selection is minimal but useful. You get three Thunderbolt 4 USB-C ports, which should suffice for most users. There's also a USB-A port, so there's no need to worry about an adapter for any of your USB devices. You'll need an adapter for an HDMI connection, however, since the USB-C ports are the only display output. Same goes for Ethernet. Should I buy the HP EliteBook Ultra G1i? At its sale price of $1,899, the EliteBook Ultra G1i is an excellent value and a great choice for your next work laptop. With a spectacular 14-inch, 2.8K OLED display powered by an Intel Lunar Lake CPU wrapped up in an elegant and compact enclosure, the EliteBook Ultra G1i is befitting of its Ultra label. Our test configuration is harder to recommend at its full price of nearly $3,000, so it's best to wait for HP's revolving and sizable discount to land on it if your purchase doesn't qualify for a volume discount. Hide our expert take Photo Gallery 1/1 How we test computers Photo Gallery 1/1 The review process for laptops, desktops, tablets and other computerlike devices consists of two parts: performance testing under controlled conditions in the CNET Labs and extensive hands-on use by our expert reviewers. This includes evaluating a device's aesthetics, ergonomics and features. A final review verdict is a combination of both objective and subjective judgments. The list of benchmarking software we use changes over time as the devices we test evolve. The most important core tests we're currently running on every compatible computer include Primate Labs Geekbench 6, Cinebench R23, PCMark 10 and 3DMark Fire Strike Ultra. A more detailed description of each benchmark and how we use it can be found on our How We Test Computers page. Hide our expert take Geekbench 6 CPU (multi-core) HP EliteBook X G1a 14224 Dell Inspiron 14 Plus 7441 13471 Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 12 11919 HP EliteBook Ultra G1i 11032 Lenovo Yoga Slim 9i 14 Gen 10 11029 Asus Zenbook S 14 10948 Acer Swift 14 AI SF14-51T-75AF 10918 Note: Longer bars indicate better performance Geekbench 6 CPU (single-core) HP EliteBook Ultra G1i 2777 HP EliteBook X G1a 2729 Lenovo Yoga Slim 9i 14 Gen 10 2728 Acer Swift 14 AI SF14-51T-75AF 2701 Asus Zenbook S 14 2681 Dell Inspiron 14 Plus 7441 2448 Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 12 2321 Note: Longer bars indicate better performance Cinebench 2024 CPU (multi-core) HP EliteBook X G1a 991 Dell Inspiron 14 Plus 7441 739 Acer Swift 14 AI SF14-51T-75AF 610 Lenovo Yoga Slim 9i 14 Gen 10 583 HP EliteBook Ultra G1i 518 Asus Zenbook S 14 484 Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 12 488 Note: Longer bars indicate better performance Cinebench 2024 CPU (single-core) HP EliteBook Ultra G1i 123 Asus Zenbook S 14 122 Lenovo Yoga Slim 9i 14 Gen 10 121 Acer Swift 14 AI SF14-51T-75AF 121 HP EliteBook X G1a 112 Dell Inspiron 14 Plus 7441 109 Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 12 102 Note: Longer bars indicate better performance 3DMark Steel Nomad Asus Zenbook S 14 882 Acer Swift 14 AI SF14-51T-75AF 871 HP EliteBook Ultra G1i 820 Lenovo Yoga Slim 9i 14 Gen 10 728 HP EliteBook X G1a 603 Note: Longer bars indicate better performance PCMark 10 Pro Edition HP EliteBook X G1a 7068 HP EliteBook Ultra G1i 6815 Lenovo Yoga Slim 9i 14 Gen 10 6812 Acer Swift 14 AI SF14-51T-75AF 6811 Asus Zenbook S 14 6684 Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 12 6178 Note: Longer bars indicate better performance Procyon AI Computer Vision (integer) Dell Inspiron 14 Plus 7441 1792 Asus Zenbook S 14 1790 Acer Swift 14 AI SF14-51T-75AF 1759 HP EliteBook X G1a 1753 HP EliteBook Ultra G1i 1705 Lenovo Yoga Slim 9i 14 Gen 10 1585 Note: Longer bars indicate better performance Online streaming battery drain test Dell Inspiron 14 Plus 7441 23:11 Acer Swift 14 AI SF14-51T-75AF 22:13 Asus Zenbook S 14 15:20 HP EliteBook X G1a 14:50 HP EliteBook Ultra G1i 13:39 Lenovo Yoga Slim 9i 14 Gen 10 13:27 Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 12 8:34 Note: Longer bars indicate better performance
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Apple's China Dream Hits a Wall -- AI Deal With Alibaba Stalled by Beijing
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Miami Herald
2 hours ago
- Miami Herald
Apple analyst raises alarm about earnings, revenue growth
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"Although tariffs have played a role in our forecast revisions, we are also factoring in weakened demand not just in North America but across Europe and parts of Asia." Counterpoint said Apple's iPhone 16 was the bestselling smartphone in the first quarter. More Tech Stocks: Palantir gets great news from the PentagonAnalyst has blunt words on Trump's iPhone tariff plansOpenAI teams up with legendary Apple exec This also marked the return of the iPhone series base variant to the top spot in Q1 after a two-year gap, the firm said. Apple maintained its strong presence in the top-10 list, securing five spots for the fifth consecutive March quarter. "We still expect positive 2025 shipment growth for Apple, driven by the iPhone 16 series' strong performance in Q1 2025," Lee said. In addition, Lee said that trends in creating premium positioning - a strategy to sell more expensive and more profitable versions of a product - remain supportive across emerging markets like India, Southeast Asia and the six Arab nations in the Gulf Cooperation Council.. "These are long-term tailwinds for iPhones," she said. The iPhone is Apple's biggest selling product, posting $46.8 billion in second-quarter sales, up 2% year-over-year. That's almost half the company's overall revenue of $95.4 billion. This is some potentially good news for global smartphone shipment growth in 2025 - just not for Apple. "The bright spot this year – again – will likely be Huawei," Associate Director Ethan Qi said. "We are seeing an easing around sourcing bottlenecks for key components at least through the rest of the year, which should help Huawei grab substantial share in the mid-to-lower-end segments at home." Over the past month, CNN reported, Trump has said he'd like to target two specific and very different companies - Apple and Mattel (MAT) - with tariffs aimed at their key products because of comments by their CEOs. Trump had praised Apple CEO Tim Cook when the company announced plans for $500 billion in US investment. But Cook later said he intended to shift production of iPhones bound for the US market to India from China. "I have long ago informed Tim Cook of Apple that I expect their iPhone's that will be sold in the United States of America will be manufactured and built in the United States, not India, or anyplace else," Trump posted on Truth Social late last month. Related: Apple users will hate the latest news from Capitol Hill "If that is not the case, a Tariff of at least 25% must be paid by Apple to the U.S." Trump later that day clarified that the tariffs would be on all imported smartphones, including those by Apple rivals like South Korea's Samsung, noting, "Otherwise, it wouldn't be fair." Last month Apple beat Wall Street's fiscal-second-quarter earnings expectations. The company said that it expected tariffs to add $900 million to its costs for the current quarter, but Cook said it was very difficult" to predict beyond June "because I'm not sure what will happen with tariffs." Needham analysts are concerned about Apple's near-term revenue and earnings growth and they downgraded the company to hold from buy without a price target. The Needham analysts say that Apple's rivals are creating new products that compete with those of the Cupertino, Calif., tech giant, TheFly and Yahoo Finance report. In addition, Needham said, Apple trades at a forward year-2026 price-to-earnings multiple of more than 26, "which looks expensive on several metrics." Needham said that for the stock to work, Apple must have the catalyst of an iPhone replacement cycle, which the firm does not foresee in the next 12 months. Until then, the $170-$180 share range is a better entry level. At last check the stock was trading above $203. If Apple decided to aggressively pursue an advertising revenue stream, it could materially accelerate its revenue and earnings growth, Needham added. The firm said that it preferred shares of Alphabet (GOOGL) and Amazon (AMZN) to Apple. Despite Apple's premium valuation, it is growing revenue and margins the slowest among its big tech competitors. The Arena Media Brands, LLC THESTREET is a registered trademark of TheStreet, Inc.